Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia

Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia was written by Edward Augustus Kendall and printed in London in 1802 by W. Peacock and Sons,[1] with a second edition in 1811.

The full title is "A Pocket Encyclopedia; Or, Library of General Knowledge, Being a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Polite Literature".[2] It is made up of six very small volumes in a choice of 12mo, 18mo or 24mo (5 3/8" tall), and retailed at 18s.[3]

The encyclopedia begins with "Abbe, a French word literally meaning an abbot" and ends with "Zootomy, the art or act of dissecting animals or living creatures."[4]

A new edition of the Pocket Encyclopedia was compiled by minister and writer Jeremiah Joyce, and published as a "corrected and enlarged" edition in 1811. The new edition was published in four thicker 12mo volumes, and sold for ₤1 4s.[3]

Legacy

An 1803 American version, Harris' Minor Encyclopedia, was edited and enlarged by the Rev. Thaddeus Mason Harris.

A German version, Brockhaus' Taschen-Encyklopädie (Pocket Encyclopedia), was published between 1816 and 1820.[5]

gollark: A good* idea: instead of nonsense like "reactors", build a production plant capable of automatically making new uranium RTGs and building facilities for them.
gollark: Is off by default.
gollark: Ah, but you need infrastructure for that.
gollark: Most mods would just be "place magic box which magically makes magic power".
gollark: The trick to balance is to be like RotaryCraft and calculate all of the maths in extreme detail.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia, W. Peacock and Sons, London, 1802 Volume I, title page
  2. Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia, W. Peacock and Sons, London, 1802 Volume I, title page
  3. Issitt, John (2017). "Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia". Jeremiah Joyce: Radical, Dissenter and Writer. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781351155069. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  4. Kendall's Pocket Encyclopedia, W. Peacock and Sons, London, 1802, Volume III, p. 238
  5. Loveland, Jeff (2019). The European Encyclopedia: From 1650 to the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 9781108481090. Retrieved 15 July 2020.


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